From a big-picture point of view, it's partly related to the age of the current act that we work under and the limit that's provided at $75 million. The bill really focuses on raising that to be consistent with what would be expected of a nuclear regime, something that's consistent with holding accountable the operators of those installations across the country, recognizing that there is an insurance community that supports those operations and that there's a balance between having a liability amount that's reasoned and one that's economically viable in trying to manage what the cost structures would be and how the insurance would work.
If we look also from a broad perspective, countries around the world that have nuclear facilities and nuclear operations as we do in Canada, predominantly for energy generation, have a range of different liability limits. They range from $100 million in Norway and in France, to $500 million in the Netherlands, to $1.2 billion in Switzerland. So Canada's view of putting $1 billion and making it absolute puts us squarely among the leading countries and is certainly an amount that we think is appropriate given the context that we have here in Canada.